The Citizen (KZN)

Does Mbalula really care about the future of our cricket?

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There is an unfortunat­e school of thought going around at the moment that all the changes in South African cricket are a White plot designed to crush transforma­tion and the hopes of Black African cricketers.

I can understand why that perception exists – Ottis Gibson has been replaced as coach by Mark Boucher, Graeme Smith has been installed as the Director of Cricket, Jacques Faul has come in as CEO in place of Thabang Moroe and old faces like Jacques Kallis and Paul Harris are back in the Proteas’ changeroom. But the perception does not stand up to critical analysis.

Firstly, all those appointmen­ts were made by a Cricket South Africa board that comprises only two white members of the eight who remain after the stampede of resignatio­ns off the burning boat.

Secondly, it ignores the presence of Enoch Nkwe, Charl Langeveldt and Justin Ontong on the coaching staff. Even the selection panel that has controvers­ially dropped Temba Bavuma is 50% Black African with Linda Zondi and Nkwe choosing the teams alongside Boucher and captain Faf du Plessis.

South African cricket and it’s most important product – the Proteas – were on the verge of total collapse and emergency measures had to be taken.

Faul has been one of the most sought-after CEOs in South African sport and is the right man to clean up the mess at CSA, and in terms of inspiring the changeroom, who better to turn to than the greatest players from South Africa’s most successful era of Test cricket?

The dropping of Bavuma saddens me because he is one of my favourite cricketers, mostly due to the tremendous tenacity he always shows.

Leaving him out of the XI at Newlands makes cricketing sense if one just looks at the numbers – an average of 27.65 over his last 12 Tests. But the bald statistics don’t tell the whole story of when Bavuma scored his runs, how he was at his best when the situation was the toughest and how many crucial partnershi­ps he shared.

But knowing how badly the new decision-makers in Proteas cricket just want to win, and also @KenBorland of how aware they are of trasformat­ion necessitie­s, I’m sure dropping Bavuma was an extremely difficult decision for them to make but one which they believe is best for the team and the player.

To say that Bavuma should be in the team regardless of how he has batted in the last year makes a mockery of transforma­tion and also of the highly-skilled player himself.

Bavuma is no quota player, he is a fine batsman just going through a bit of a slump. Knowing how determined a cricketer he is, I am sure he would be appalled at any suggestion of him being selected on anything less than merit.

That we need transforma­tion targets at all is thanks to the totally artificial selection policy we had under Apartheid in which there was a 100% white quota, which has screwed everything up for probably many more years to come.

The fact that South Africa are only playing four players of colour, just one of them a Black African, in the second Test against England shows that the system below the Proteas is not working when it comes to the injections of previously disadvanta­ged talent that are required.

But it is not even really the franchises that are the breeding grounds of this talent; it is at grassroots level where this developmen­t has to happen.

Which is why it is so infuriatin­g when someone like Fikile Mbalula, who was a swaggering idiot when he was sports minister, tweets about the changes in CSA taking transforma­tion backwards.

When Mbalula was sports minister I can remember countless hours of bluster and big talk about transforma­tion but I can’t remember a single meaningful impact he made in that department. Without government investment at grassroots, transforma­tion will not succeed.

Transforma­tion and the plight of Black African cricket has also not received much love from their own people on the CSA board.

From the time Aaron Phangiso was shamefully used as window dressing at the 2015 World Cup and did not play a single game, the suits instead only getting involved on the eve of the semifinal to ensure Kyle Abbott was dropped, to the awful treatment of former Proteas assistant coach Malibongwe Maketa, there is no hiding from the fact that the board have failed when it comes to transforma­tion.

It has been the much-maligned Smith who has actually brought Maketa in from the wilderness and seconded him to the SA U19 side for their World Cup later this month.

There have also been allegation­s that the salaries of Black Africans in important positions are less than what Whites previously in those roles were paid.

The Proteas should not be the drivers of transforma­tion while they are at the same time trying to win in the cut-throat world of internatio­nal sport, they should be the beneficiar­ies of it happening at the levels below them.

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